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EVERYTHING WILL BE FINE: THE PLASTIC OPTIMISM OF SABINE FINKENAUER by Àlex Mitrani text for the catalogue Drawing Objects, MasArt gallery, May 2008 Sabine Finkenauer has forsaken the imaginary of children, the fable, i.e., the romanticism that had characterised her iconography so far and made her oeuvre so instantly appealing. In view of her recent works, this universe represents the fertile ground that has favoured the development of a task in which formal investigations are filled with a new evolving and symbolic meaning. The ambiguous charm, for it was only superficially agreeable, of the flower girls has evolved to the point of reversing its operation. Where we previously encountered something sinister behind the apparent innocence of a world inhabited by silent dolls, we now discover a certain discourse of hedonistic well-being behind much more rigorous forms and minimalist compositions based on geometry and its variations. While her pieces of furniture used to evoke dolls' houses, we now come across graphic features resembling mock-ups of the utopian constructions first designed by le Corbusier and the Bauhaus and which would eventually lead to the International Style. This architectural model often had an actual counterpart in buildings associated with holidays and leisure, giving way to what has been described as an architecture of happiness. Hence what is revealed is a peculiar relationship between avant-garde utopia and everyday banality. The mock-up stands between the project, the building and the object. Sabine Finkenauer's structures are not centred on white space as if they were abstractions, but are supported by bases in the lower area of her images. They have a specific weight, a volume, as a result of which there is tension between the plane (that corresponds to the conception) and the thing, the presence (that corresponds to the physical reality). In her engrossed inclination to draw things geometrically and in their incipient material realisation, Finkenauer seems to evoke the enigmatic dimensions of the primary sciences, like the polyhedron in Dürer's famous engraving Melancholy. These latest works by Finkenauer evoke some of the playful joy of Alexander Calder, but also the analytical spirit of Aurélie de Nemours, and yet at the same time they stand apart, in a context we can for now only describe as that of post-postmodern art, if you excuse the repetition. These pieces obey a disciplined and impertinent effort to make independent plastic creation once again feasible, assuming the historical and figurative associations that crop up along the way. |
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